Hip-Hop Scanner: The Mad World

Welcome to the Google music Hip-Hop Scanner, where we surface the most exciting new music and reissued gems in hip-hop that you can add to your locker for free.

Around the turn of the century there was a certain madness in parts of the rap underground. Acts like El-P, Aesop Rock and Antipop Consortium were at the forefront of New York rap's avant-garde. Working with a palette that was more Atari Teenage Riot than A Tribe Called Quest, these acts prided themselves on an aesthetic that was overly wordy, proudly abstract and, most of all, sonically abrasive. At the time this chaos was heralded by certain critics as the future of rap but by the second half of the decade it was nearly forgotten by all but a narrowly cultivated and fenced off audience of diehards. While mainstream rap turned defiantly odder in the days of auto-tune and Lil Wayne, indie rap teeter-tottered towards a mellower vibe. The introverted and noodly boom-bap of J. Dilla and Madlib rose as the dominant underground sound and the themes shifted from chin stroking, catharsis and post-apocalyptic laments, to simpler joys like marijuana and rapping about rapping. All the while their more abrasive peers mostly went ignored by traditional hip hop listeners and even were derided by many of the cool kid critics who once comprised their core demographic.

"30" Danny Brown

"Bruiser Banger" Danny Brown

"Volcano" Anti-Pop Consortium

"Takyon" Death Grips

"Full Moon" Death Grips

"Guillotine" Death Grips



But, as Q-Tip's father once warned, things go in cycles. And thus, in 2011, chaotic noise rap once again reigns supreme over many of the hip-hop underground's fragmented corners -- from the scattershot teenage rampage of Odd Future (whose productions circumstantially have more in common with that turn of the century underground than they'd like to admit), to the more mature but twice as intense noise rap of Death Grips. Released quietly without ever being quiet, the San Jose collective's Ex-Military LP operates under a simple but skull-shattering premise: bury rapper MC Ride in as much noise and clatter as possible and let him howl his way out primally.

Danny Brown is unexpectedly emerging as yet another indie rapper artist to embrace this madness. A product of the same Detroit scene that spawned Dilla, Danny cut his teeth recording alongside Dilla-influenced producers like Black Milk, but his exasperated wheeze and stop and go flow always seemed too aggressive for that template. His latest effort XXX mostly steps away from those roots in favor of digital blips and bursts of chainsaw buzzes.

Then there's the recently reunited Anti-Pop Consortium. Arguably the strangest inhabitants of the New York underground, the group continues to trudge along quietly. Their "Volcano" from 2009's Fluorescent Black is hookier and more dance friendly than most anything they produced in their heyday. At the time it seemed like their only logical bid for hipster relevance. Today it might make more sense for them to embrace their less accessible traits and aim for the noise. Chaos is, after all, cool once again. -- Andrew Nosnitsky

"30" Danny Brown

"Bruiser Banger" Danny Brown

"Volcano" Anti-Pop Consortium

"Takyon" Death Grips

"Full Moon" Death Grips

"Guillotine" Death Grips

9 comments:

Jeff said...

Please let us hear a sample! I don't want to constantly add & remove from music only to hear a sample ...

AaronInAustin said...

I for one am definitely ready for the 'noise-wall' hip-hop to cycle out.
Danny Brown is a good example of a talented rapper being led astray. For some reason his sound actually makes me think of Gravediggaz a little... anyway.
Good start for Hip-Hop scanner!

Anonymous said...

this music isn't very good, its not very great either!!!!!!!!!

Altbauten said...

Death Grips? OH YES.

Anonymous said...

I think you should incorporate more old school Hip-Hop tracks to this list. What you are thinking about really isn't Hip-Hop. This needs more underground tracks from Nujabes, J Dilla, 9th Wonder, Blazo, Kondor, Shin-Ski, DJ Okawari, DJ Whitesmith, Marcus D, Substantial, Pismo, Nomak, Tsunenori, Incise, Cyne, and numerous others. Real Hip-Hop is the purest expression of one's soul.

ZacZam said...

I am so impressed with these song choices! Good to see Magnifier bringing attention to it

Miggles said...

I did not enjoy these artist or their so called rap musical talent...they might be underground or whatever they might be, but their music is not enjoyable...it sounds like unknown underground hip hop artists trying so hard to sound hip pop-ish...its not working either...I love underground music because its the heart and soul of the art but with giant corporations pimping out an underground starving artists...I love everything Google is trying to do for the consumer and this is an awesome start but please do a better job selecting the next batch of songs you put out...email me for some suggestions I would love to help...I only tolerate legit music no matter what, not just a kid off the street not knowing what he's doing but yet thinks his music is hot and then convinces A&R's that it is as well. So then they go and give him/her some advancements to satisfy them and putting money in marketing to make the average consumer a media puppet to sell thousands of garbage records. I really really mainstream radio, its the worst its been so far.

Rob said...

Danny Brown is definitely the man.

OcamlOmen said...

@Miggles Your response is confusing the hell out of me? Wtf are you talking about? You can't back up your argument for why Death Grips is trying to sound like hip hop. You probably can't even get past the Charles Manson sample on the album at the opening of exmilitary. Don't talk about Death Grips, its makes you sound unintelligent.

As for Danny Brown, he has a song off of his XXX mixtape called Radio Song which talks about how stupid the radio is. Also he's 30 years old (xxx) so his take on life and getting fucked up walks the line between shock-value and a mature tragic perspective. There's still hope for you Miggles, you just gotta smarten up about your criticism.

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